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Public Golf vs. Private Club: Familiarity or Variety?

September 4, 2009 | By Chris Chirico | 5 Comments

Public golf course or private country club – which is better? It’s a debate that will continue on as long as the game of golf does. Unfortunately, it’s a rare occasion that your average weekend hack gets the opportunity to add a few divots to some exclusive private track. However, I was lucky enough to be given this chance and I can now offer my humble opinion. Right off the bat I can tell you, the country club life ain’t for everyone.

Now don’t get me wrong, I’ve played the very private TPC River Highlands (home of the Travelers Championship) right here in my home state of Connecticut, and it was downright amazing. The course itself was challenging, but not overbearing. The condition and maintenance of the course was exceptional and the staff was courteous and professional. All-in-all, this may have been the nicest course I’ve played up to this point. But, there’s more to this debate than just the course itself.

Some of the many fine points about TPC are rivaled by several public courses throughout the state at a fraction of the cost. At the time I played TPC, not only did I have to be invited by a member, but I had to shell out $180 to play. Other than Lake of Isles (ranked #85 on Golf Magazine’s Top 100 You Can Play for 2008) this would rank as the costliest course in the state. Not to mention the necessary membership fee, which at last check started at $13,500 per year and could reach as high as $36,000! Many courses throughout the state, and all of New England for that matter, feature beautiful scenery – something TPC was lacking a bit. Most courses have friendly and helpful staffs. Also, all of the upscale public courses throughout the state (99 out of 100 times) are well-maintained.

Further, there’s the stereotype of the typical private course golfer. You know the one – nose-in-the-air, can’t understand how or why you would want to play a public course…they have the “it’s private so it must be better” attitude. It is just a stereotype and I would imagine most private course members do not reflect this, but there was a guy like that in my foursome at TPC. In my experience both on-and-off the links, the private course member seems to take his game a little too serious – almost as if it’s a job. Whereas a typical public course player is more about the fun of the game and the camaraderie that goes along with it. Again, these are only stereotypes and to each his own, but I’m out there to have a good time.

In my own opinion, spending the money to play a beautiful private course is worth it…one time – if you’re invited or playing in a tournament there, go for it. But ultimately, I prefer variety. I guess I could understand if all your friends were members – but I would still want to travel around to various courses and experience the differences each has to offer. It seems to me playing a different course week-to-week adds something more to the game, rather than playing at the same place time and again. I’m not sure about you, but in today’s economy, I would feel committed to only playing on that one course if I were shelling out the monetary equivalent of a small car every year. And I’m a man…stereotypically I’m not supposed to be good with commitment.

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: AVERAGE JOE, Golf Magazine, Lake of Isles, PGA TOUR, private course, public course, TPC River Highlands

The PGA Tour is Giving us a Complex

August 17, 2009 | By Greg D'Andrea | Leave a Comment

As the sport pages across the web breakdown every shot of Y.E. Yang’s victory over Tiger Woods yesterday at the PGA Championship, we’re left reminded about the vast degree of separation between the skill-level of pros and those of average Joes (consider the average golfer shoots 97). Forget Mr. Yang and Mr. Woods shot 70 and 75 respectively; instead consider they shot those scores from the championship tees, with millions watching and more than $1.3 million in prize money to the winner – it boggles the average golfer’s mind (I can’t break 90 from the white-tees, no money on the line and 3 people watching – and usually laughing).


I think this is why I don’t watch golf on TV all that much (well, that and the fact you can literally watch the greens’ grass grow while waiting for a pro to line-up his putt) – and it also explains why I don’t really follow the PGA Tour. Don’t get me wrong, I love this game (and can appreciate a good golfer), but those guys don’t make me feel good about myself at all – they’re constantly showing-off with their 65’s and their 59’s. Show me a tour with guys shooting 93 and 101 – all whom won some sort of lottery to get there, and all competing on TV with beer and a steak dinner as prize money (the trophy cup is literally a beer mug that you get to keep after you drink it).


See now THAT would inspire me and probably millions of other golfers around the world to boot. So while this small band of really good golfers (e.g. the PGA Tour) continues to insult average Joe golfers week-in and week-out, I’ll be out on the local muni, having a few beers, smoking a cigar, listening to my friends complain about work and shooting a 97. FORE!

Filed Under: The Pro Tours Tagged With: PGA CHAMPIONSHIP, PGA TOUR, tiger woods, Y.E. YANG

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